Though in recent years the actor has lent his voice to the green ogre at the center of the "Shrek" franchise — most recently in 2010 — his career in Hollywood has otherwise stalled. Last year, he did a Funny or Die skit with Kevin Kline. It's also been rumored for years that he would make a fourth "Austin Powers" film, but the project has yet to come to fruition.

So what has the 50-year-old been up to, exactly? Apparently preparing for his directorial debut. On Monday, A&E IndieFilms said it had partnered with Myers on "Supermensch," a documentary about talent manager Shep Gordon.

Gordon, who met Myers in 1991 on the set of "Wayne's World," helped shape the careers of musicians such as Alice Cooper, Luther Vandross and Teddy Pendergrass. His larger-than-life personality has been well-documented over the years: He traveled on the Concorde, dated Sharon Stone and drove a white Bentley, according to a 2011 profile in Oprah magazine. He later became the guardian of the four children of a Wilhelmina model whom he briefly dated.

The film will focus on Gordon's life in the "uber fast lane," according to a press release, and will feature the manager's clients and friends, including Cooper, Michael Douglas and Sylvester Stallone. A picture sent by A&E to promote the film showed Gordon, his body covered in hair, sporting only his tighty whities and sunglasses.

When Myers met Gordon, he found him to be "a perfect combination of Brian Epstein, Marshall McLuhan and Mr Magoo," the actor-turned-director said in a statement. "I've been trying to get Shep to agree to let me make a movie about him for 10 years. Last year he finally said yes. I loved him like a brother before we started making this film and now having sifted through his life and his legacy, I love him even more."

The new documentary "Blackfish" opens with footage of a killer whale and a human being beneath the water's surface. As their forms become entangled, it looks as if they are involved in some kind of struggle, and the moment grows increasingly ominous. Suddenly the animal charges at the human.

Outfest Los Angeles has announced the winners of the 31st L.A. LGBT film festival. The nonprofit organization hosts the oldest continuously running film festival in the city in order to foster, support and promote LGBT stories on screen.

Catasauqua police officer Scott M. Rothrock had already been stabbed once in the chest with a 13-inch butcher knife and was trying to block other stabbing attempts as he lay on his back in a snow bank in east Allentown last month.